We do believe that renewing the public's faith in the environmental assessment process, but also in the life-cycle regulation—the regulation through the construction and operation period—is essential to what Canadians need and should be able to expect from their national energy regulator.
We are working hard to reach out to Canadians, to talk to them, and to provide them with information resources on our website or in person if that's the circumstance they're in, to talk to them about how the board regulates, how it address certain kinds of issues in the application stage where an environmental assessment is done, and then through the life cycle of the project. We don't just approve a project at the beginning and say, “Here are your conditions” and then let the project operate. We are there inspecting during construction, during operation, auditing, having an ongoing conversation with the company. Did they build it in a safe way? Are they continuing to operate it in a safe way? What adjustments need to be done to their system to move forward?
That kind of engagement is what we really believe we need to rebuild Canadians' trust in the regulator.